Originally posted by Dr. Strangelove
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1. I think there are two causes of a recession, lack of supply and lack of demand. Lack of demand is like the Great Depression when banks closing and people not being to get to their money caused a sharp lack of demand. Most economists agree that "helicopter money" is the policy prescription for that.
What we have now is a lack of supply, which drives inflation. But it also means that paying people not to work gets you more people not working and not even looking to work. This is why when you drive around the Midwest anyway, you see "help wanted" signs everywhere. Restaurants, where I live, have decided to not open on Monday because of labor shortages. Most states had calculated the proper amount of unemployment insurance they should pay to someone who lost their job, not of their own volition. The fed gov decided to pay everyone $ 15.00/hr above the unemployment benefit previously calculated. Why work? And once you figure out how to get by without working, you'll tend to not work even when the "excess" benefits are reduced.
2. Let's keep in mind the definition of two consecutive quarters of negative growth is both backward-looking and a long time. To me, it means you have to have been in a negative economy for half a year. Trump had that in the first and second quarters of 2020, the 2nd quarter being down 20%. Third quarter GDP growth was 30%. I'm thinking the shock of the pandemic changed the denominator used for these calculations so much that they may be less meaningful now than during "normal" times.
3. The policy prescription for a lack of supply is now and has always been tax cuts to incentivize people to work more and produce more because they get to keep more. JFK did that and so did RR. But again, there has not been any time in history when welfare payments have been so high. And, since welfare recipients don't pay taxes, reductions in marginal tax rates do not incentivize them.
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